2 March 2014 Edition

• Family members of the 11 people killed in the Ballymurphy Massacre are joined by Gerry Adams and Paul Maskey outside Leinster House to call on the Irish Government to support their campaign for justice

» Mark Moloney

John Teggart’s father, Danny Teggart (44), was shot 14 times, mainly in the back, as he lay wounded

AN TAOISEACH Enda Kenny and the Irish Government have
finally given their support to the campaign for justice by the families of 11
people murdered by the British Army during a shooting rampage in west Belfast
in August 1971 known as the Ballymurphy Massacre.

Ten people – including a priest and a grandmother – were
shot dead by the British Army’s Parachute Regiment during a 48-hour period
between 9 and 11 August 1971.

Another man died of a heart attack when troops placed an
unloaded pistol in his mouth and pulled the trigger.

The same British Army regiment would go on to be involved in
the Bloody Sunday massacre in Derry six months later.

The shootings occurred in the immediate aftermath of the
introduction of internment without trial.

The Ballymurphy families want the British Government to
establish an independent inquiry similar to the one into the 1989 Hillsborough
soccer stadium disaster in which 96 Liverpool soccer fans died.

• Rita Bonner's 20-year-old brother, John, was murdered by British paratroopers; her 18-year-old brother was tortured

Speaking to An Phoblacht before their meeting with the
Taoiseach in Leinster House, Rita Bonner said:

“My brother, John Laverty, he was 20 and an innocent
civilian. I’ve campaigned for 42 years for justice and still my brother’s name
is not cleared. For two days before he was murdered we were under siege. When
the bin lids rattled, my brother went out to see what was going on in the area.
That was very normal in those times. My other brother was 18 and he went out
with him. The result was my brother John came back in a box.

“My other brother was tortured and humiliated by the
paratroopers and served six months in prison for a crime he did not commit. I
will not stop campaigning until every breath in me is done. And when I’m
finished there’s people behind me and these other families to take over our
campaign.

“We would like to see justice done very soon.”

John Teggart, whose father, Danny Teggart (44), was shot 14
times (mainly in the back as he lay wounded) told An Phoblacht:

“I was only 11. I remember the heavy gunfire. The first I heard
about what had happened was coming into my house and my mother was in the
process of telling my older brother that daddy had been shot by the British
Army. It feels just like yesterday.”

He says the panel proposal used in the Hillsborough stadium
disaster is tried, tested and cost-effective.

“The Irish Government needs to strongly support these
families and other Irish citizens in the North.”

The families have already approached a number of individuals
to sit on the independent panel, including Nuala O’Loan, the former Police
Ombudsman in the North, and the author of the Hillsborough disaster independent
report, Phil Scraton.

• John Teggart's father, Danny, was shot 14 times by British troops

Following a 90-minute meeting with the Irish Government
(during which the families were accompanied by representatives from Sinn Féin,
the SDLP and Alliance Party), the Government announced it is “fully committed
to assisting the families in their search for justice, finding out the truth
and vindicating the good name and reputation of their loved ones. The
Government supports the call for the appointment of an independent panel to
examine all documents relating to the context, circumstances and aftermath of
the deaths.”

The Taoiseach has also given a commitment to raise the issue
personally with British Prime Minister David Cameron.

When the families left Government Buildings, many were in
tears on getting the Government’s backing. John Teggart says the Irish
Government has made the right decision:

“This is a significant development in our campaign for the
truth. There is still much work to be done. We need the Irish Government to
persuade the British Government of the merits of this proposal.”

Sinn Féin leader Gerry Adams TD, who is from the Ballymurphy
area of Belfast, welcomed the news that the Taoiseach has backed the families’
campaign for justice:

“I welcome this commitment from Enda Kenny and I urge him to
act upon it by talking to his British counterpart and urging him to make a
similar commitment.

“The onus is very much on the British Government to give
these families the closure they deserve and which they have been denied for
over 40 years.”

The families told reporters in a statement that all of those
who died were killed in breach of Article 2 of the European Convention on Human
Rights, adding:

“The case raises serious questions regarding human rights
abuses committed by the British Army and of a culture of impunity in the North
of Ireland in which members of the security forces routinely were above the
law.”